Who among us doesn’t possess a lot of goodwill for doughnuts? We know we sure do.
So when we think of “Los Angeles,” what comes to mind: sunshine, beaches, Hollywood, and sprawl? No. What comes to mind are chili, hot dogs, and doughnuts. Those items — more precisely, the roadside architecture which establishments that hawk these foods employ — just sing “LA” to us. Especially doughnuts.
So the California Court of Appeal’s recent opinion in Los Angeles County Metro. Transit Authority v. Yum Yum Donut Shops, Inc., No. B276280 (Feb. 26, 2019) grabbed our attention. And not just for its spelling of “donut,” because the case involved a donut shop, and the recovery in eminent domain for the loss of business goodwill, two things we love.
There, the MTA condemned a doughnut — donut — shop in central LA. Store 58 to

